Taking a tenth

Taking a tenth

Land records are an excellent way of finding out more about our ancestors and where they lived. Celia Heritage explains, looking at tithe records in particular

Celia Heritage, Family historian and lecturer

Celia Heritage

Family historian and lecturer


An 1846 tithe map of Tinwell, Rutland
An 1846 tithe map of Tinwell, Rutland

The king of all land records are tithe records, which are uniquely available online at thegenealogist.co.uk .

Tithe records were produced between 1837 and 1855. They will potentially tell you more about your ancestor and the property they owned or occupied. The records cover 75% of England and Wales and relate to all land that was subject to a tax known as a ‘tithe’. One of the best things about these records is that they include not just your better-off, land-owning ancestors, but also your more humble antecedents, who may have only rented a small plot of land. Tithe records cover both urban and rural areas and will help build a picture of what life was like in your ancestor’s town or parish too. There are two main types of records to look for: tithe maps and tithe apportionments.

Tithe maps
Tithe maps are large-scale maps produced as a result of the 1836 Tithe Commutation Act, which instigated a survey of all parishes where tithes were levied.

The maps will provide you with the detail lacking in Ordnance Survey maps of this era. They depict all the land in a parish, including any land not subject to tithe, although the latter will not usually be represented in detail. The maps are divided into numbered plots, each representing

a titheable plot of land and its boundaries.

Although the maps were produced by a number of different surveyors and did not follow a standard design, they routinely depict features such as houses and outbuildings, rivers, ponds, roads and trackways. They are an excellent means of finding out more about the village or town in which your ancestor lived, and what life would have been like for them.

The quality of the maps varies and, although the Tithe Commission only deemed one sixth of the maps received to be ‘first class’ in terms of accuracy of scale, the ‘second class’ maps remain of great use to family historians too.

To fully benefit from the map you need to use it alongside the apportionment.

Tithe apportionments
First, the amount of tithe owed by the parish as a whole was calculated, and then this was apportioned to each piece of land, depending on its size and state of cultivation or use. So each landowner was responsible for a percentage of what was owed by the parish as a whole. The ‘tithe rent charge’, as it became known, was set nationally, based on the seven-year average price of wheat barley and oats. The ‘apportionment’, or ‘schedule’, lists each plot of land and gives the following information: landowner’s name, occupier’s name, number of the relevant plot on the map, name or description of the house or piece of land, its state of cultivation (eg arable, pasture, house and buildings), its acreage and the amount of rent charge allocated to that plot.

Records in action
Using TheGenealogist.co.uk, there are several ways to search tithe records. Firstly, you can search by your ancestor’s name to see how much land they owned or occupied. The apportionment will give you details of their land, and then you can click to look at that plot of land on the tithe map. You can limit your search to just one parish or search over several parishes within a county. If you prefer, you can also scroll through the apportionment images page by page.

Alternatively, you can select a parish and then view the map as a whole. This is very useful if you are interested in the history of the place itself, rather than just a person. To do this, choose your county and parish, and then click ‘search’.

Tithe MapTithe apportionment
Map and apportionment extract for She(e)pshed, Leicestershire (1849), available at www.TheGenealogist.co.uk. Using the map and apportionment together we can see that plot 24 (flagged) belonged to Charles March Phillips, but was occupied by Thomas Freeman. The apportionment shows that Freeman also occupied 12 neighbouring plots, and these also belonged to Phillips. Most were arable fields, but about 12 acres were down to pasture. Plot 24 was the ‘House, Outbuildings, Yard and Garden’, which consisted of 1 rod and 22 perches. The map names the house as Little Awe. Freeman occupied 47 acres 17 perches of land, which were rated together at a total of £14 7d. The names of each piece of land are interesting in themselves, frequently indicating a topographical feature or the appearance of the plot. Some maps, as here, also record major road names and names of larger buildings

Select any entry from the list of results and click the link to view the map. Although it will initially zoom in on that individual’s plot of land, you can zoom out to view the whole map. If there is a particular piece of land you are interested in, you can then go back and insert that plot number into the search engine to see who owned it and get a description of that plot of land.

While the map will show you where your ancestor’s land lay, the apportionment will tell you more about that land.

The beauty of these records is that you can use them in conjunction with Ordnance Survey maps, census returns and other sources, such as rate books, to build up a complete picture of the parish and its population. You can pinpoint who lived where, how land was being farmed, what industries there were and, of course, locate your ancestor’s house.

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TITLETITLE
Contrast the Shepshed map and apportionment (p29) with those for Wymondham, a less rural area. Here we see many more houses and shops and, in many cases, the nature of the shop is also recorded eg George Todd ran a carpenter’s shop and Vincent Hickman a glazier’s shop. In this extract we can see Hickman’s house and shop plus gardens, plot 289 (circled red).

IN FOCUS: tithe maps

TheGenealogist.co.uk has added original 19th century maps to its comprehensive, searchable National Tithe Records collection to help you explore the fields and houses of your ancestor’s home villages and towns
thegenealogist search
Start by going to thegenealogist.co.uk then select Landowner Records followed by Tithe Records from the drop down menu. We shall look for Sir Robert Peel in Middlesex, a county that covered some of the area we would now think of as London
thegenealogist result
In 1854 Sir Robert, twice Prime Minister of the country and creator of the modern police force, was the occupier of land that was owned by the Earl of Listowell in St Margaret’s, Westminster. By clicking on the Transcription icon we can then see the names of both the owner and occupier, the date it was entered into the records and the plot number on the plan
apportionment
The image of the apportionment reveals that it is a house: No 22 Princess Gate
Tithe Map
Clicking on the map icon will quickly zoom in to show the plot on the plan. You can then use the magnify buttons to move in and out to see the plots in relation to the full plan of the parish

Tithes are a rich resource for family historians to find their ancestors within. The records and maps cover owners and occupiers of land from all strata of society in early Victorian times

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